Motivated Resistance to Counterattitudinal Arguments: The effects of affirmation, argument strength and attitude importance

In this study we explored some of the factors associated with biased processing of attitude-relevant information. We were particularly interested in the possibility that a self-affirmation, by reducing self-evaluative concerns, might increase participants' willingness to impartially evaluate...

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Main Author: Correll, Joshua
Language:en
Published: University of Waterloo 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/744
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-7442014-06-18T03:50:41Z Motivated Resistance to Counterattitudinal Arguments: The effects of affirmation, argument strength and attitude importance Correll, Joshua Psychology self-affirmation argument strength attitude importance attitude change In this study we explored some of the factors associated with biased processing of attitude-relevant information. We were particularly interested in the possibility that a self-affirmation, by reducing self-evaluative concerns, might increase participants' willingness to impartially evaluate information that conflicts with their current views. We examined students' reactions to arguments about increasing tuition as a function of four factors: attitude importance, argument strength, the congruence of arguments with existing attitudes, and our experimental manipulation of affirmation. We found that affirmation reduced biased evaluation only for participants who rated the issue as important. We also found that affirmation dramatically impacted the perception of argument strength. Stronger counterattitudinal arguments were rejected by non-affirmed participants, who did not distinguish them from weak arguments, presumably because of the esteem threat posed by a strong ideological challenge. Affirmed participants, though, evaluated strong counterattitudinal arguments more positively. 2006-08-22T13:42:00Z 2006-08-22T13:42:00Z 2000 2000 Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10012/744 en Copyright: 2000, Correll, Joshua. All rights reserved. University of Waterloo
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
self-affirmation
argument strength
attitude importance
attitude change
spellingShingle Psychology
self-affirmation
argument strength
attitude importance
attitude change
Correll, Joshua
Motivated Resistance to Counterattitudinal Arguments: The effects of affirmation, argument strength and attitude importance
description In this study we explored some of the factors associated with biased processing of attitude-relevant information. We were particularly interested in the possibility that a self-affirmation, by reducing self-evaluative concerns, might increase participants' willingness to impartially evaluate information that conflicts with their current views. We examined students' reactions to arguments about increasing tuition as a function of four factors: attitude importance, argument strength, the congruence of arguments with existing attitudes, and our experimental manipulation of affirmation. We found that affirmation reduced biased evaluation only for participants who rated the issue as important. We also found that affirmation dramatically impacted the perception of argument strength. Stronger counterattitudinal arguments were rejected by non-affirmed participants, who did not distinguish them from weak arguments, presumably because of the esteem threat posed by a strong ideological challenge. Affirmed participants, though, evaluated strong counterattitudinal arguments more positively.
author Correll, Joshua
author_facet Correll, Joshua
author_sort Correll, Joshua
title Motivated Resistance to Counterattitudinal Arguments: The effects of affirmation, argument strength and attitude importance
title_short Motivated Resistance to Counterattitudinal Arguments: The effects of affirmation, argument strength and attitude importance
title_full Motivated Resistance to Counterattitudinal Arguments: The effects of affirmation, argument strength and attitude importance
title_fullStr Motivated Resistance to Counterattitudinal Arguments: The effects of affirmation, argument strength and attitude importance
title_full_unstemmed Motivated Resistance to Counterattitudinal Arguments: The effects of affirmation, argument strength and attitude importance
title_sort motivated resistance to counterattitudinal arguments: the effects of affirmation, argument strength and attitude importance
publisher University of Waterloo
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/744
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